Destroy: Mad Max 2, Shine..err cant think of any more...
I saw "Idiot Box" last night...I thought that was pretty good although I'm sure no-one will agree with me
― michael bourke, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Dan Perry, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― dave k, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― mark s, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― fritz, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
Best feel good film ever (or "evah", if you weeel).
― Judd Nelson, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― ducklingmonster, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Ess Kay, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
Search Children of the Revolution.
― j.lu, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― chris, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― MICHELINE, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― jessica, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
Destroy: Dead Calm, wtf is wrong with you people? DEAD BORING is what I call it, ha ha ha. etc.
― Ally, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
i liked it. fairly simple story, good music.
― hamish, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
classic.
― a, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
The Aussie Film Database
senses of cinema
― stevo, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― di, Tuesday, 21 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Menelaus Darcy, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― gareth, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Sarah, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Alan Trewartha, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― mew!, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Simeon, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
The Castle
― nickie, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Graham, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
Search: Walkabout, Sunday Too Far Away, ...Hanging Rock, The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith, The Last Wave, Newsfront, Summerfield, The Devil's Playground, My Brilliant Career, Breaker Morant.
From more recent times, I also quite like: The Big Steal, Love & Other Catastrophes.
― Jeff W, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
Chopper is wicked.
― N., Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― dave k, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
'Mad Max 2' is classic!
― DavidM, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Ally, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― cuba libre (nathalie), Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Pyth, Wednesday, 22 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― chris, Thursday, 23 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― haloist, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
and really search: 'goddess of 67'
― minna, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― BJ, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Andrew L, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Senor MExican Geoff, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― toraneko, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Chris Barrus, Friday, 24 May 2002 00:00 (twenty-three years ago)
Then I'd recommend Malcolm, Heatwave and Winter Of Our Dreams.
― Ben Mott (Ben Mott), Saturday, 5 October 2002 19:24 (twenty-three years ago)
― donna (donna), Saturday, 5 October 2002 19:55 (twenty-three years ago)
I liked Little Fish. Pretty much just because of Hugo Weaving's performance. Every moment he's on screen, he's simply marvelous, I totally bought his character. So sad. It may be even better then his voicing of Megatron?
I recall the Interview being a sweet movie too.
Also, awesome, Muriel's Wedding is set in/based on mah home town.
― Drooone, Wednesday, 8 August 2007 01:04 (eighteen years ago)
Search: Wolf Creek
― S-, Wednesday, 8 August 2007 01:44 (eighteen years ago)
s'ok.
― Drooone, Wednesday, 8 August 2007 01:45 (eighteen years ago)
Search: 'Me, Myself'
― Michael White, Wednesday, 8 August 2007 01:48 (eighteen years ago)
Noise (2007) is an incredible film: laissez-faire cop battles tinnitus, unhinged killer and a growing ennui in Melbourne's God-forsaken and disenfranchised western suburbs.
Great performances, excellent script, amazing sound & cinematography, and a gripping, ghost-town tension. Like the IMDb reviewer says, even greater than the sum of its considerable parts.
SEARCH!
― Huey in Melbourne, Wednesday, 8 August 2007 01:53 (eighteen years ago)
Head On, as mark S said upthread, is a great movie.
― moley, Friday, 10 August 2007 01:11 (eighteen years ago)
Wasn't there a decent zombie (or something) movie that came out a couple years ago that had a shite/ridic ending?
― W4LTER, Friday, 10 August 2007 01:18 (eighteen years ago)
this one
― W4LTER, Friday, 10 August 2007 01:22 (eighteen years ago)
Head On is was fucking atrocious. Two strikes against Ana Kokkinos.
Yeah moley, I think a dummy head mic thing. Didn't D. Bowie do that for some of his albums?
― S-, Friday, 10 August 2007 01:58 (eighteen years ago)
Yaaaay more votes for The Castle! "YOU got friend? *I* got friend!"
― Laurel, Friday, 10 August 2007 03:11 (eighteen years ago)
did anyone like praise by john curran? i liked it.
― GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ, Friday, 10 August 2007 05:24 (eighteen years ago)
F6, F6, what the F**k is that!? Tray 3!? I cleaned Tray 3, three f**king times!!
― Hard like armour, Friday, 10 August 2007 06:19 (eighteen years ago)
Destroy: 'Can't Stop the Murders'. How can two comedians be so unfunny?
― S-, Friday, 10 August 2007 07:11 (eighteen years ago)
haitch, I heard somewhere that what really happens after that is that the grave diggers storm the house and beat him into a pulp. But for some reason, this ending was cut - to bloody and horrific or something.
― haitch, Saturday, 11 August 2007 09:23 (eighteen years ago)
Ah. Well, I've heard also that there is a further bit, also cut off - the bikers then strip off their leather jackets to reveal that they were aliens all along. Then cheetah does a backflip and everyone laughs. The end.
― moley, Saturday, 11 August 2007 09:29 (eighteen years ago)
I fancy sam worthington like mad. He's gorgeous.
I think there have been many Australian movies I've loved, but only really obvious ones are coming to mind right now... sunday too far away, they're a weird mob, the chant of jimmy blacksmith, picnic at hanging rock, two hands, dogs in space, puberty blues, the last days of chez nous, romper stomper, the year my voice broke, the big steal, muriel's wedding, the proposition, bad boy bubby
― gem, Sunday, 12 August 2007 04:11 (eighteen years ago)
i loved little fish and lantana too actually. and proof. and malcolm. and 2:37. i did see john curran's praise, but i absolutely loved andrew mcgahan's novel (which i recently re-read and still love actually) and the movie typically wasn't a patch. I think the only aussie movies i've seen relatively recently that i wasn't excited about were jindabyne and candy.
― gem, Sunday, 12 August 2007 04:15 (eighteen years ago)
Don't know if anyone has mentioned Bad Boy Bubby, but I fell in love with that film - saw it once at about 4am and it hasn't left my mind since... he turns into Nick Cave!
OK well I'm paying attention, this has been mentioned 3 times now! But what struck me wasnt him turning into Nick Cave (he just *looks* like Cave), but the nod to TISM that Bubby's band ended up turning into. I mean I know the clingwrap head coverings were meant to be a joke on what he did to his cat, but surely it was a TISM pisstake as well. That film was awesomely fucked up, I liked it a lot.
― Trayce, Sunday, 12 August 2007 04:16 (eighteen years ago)
i sometimes find myself quoting it a bit randomly... 'you're a verrry sexy woman flo', then i get quite excited if anyone knows the reference. i loved that film too.
― gem, Sunday, 12 August 2007 05:34 (eighteen years ago)
proof was so classic, in retrospect. watching it 45987897 times for media studies kinda wore me out on it!
― haitch, Sunday, 12 August 2007 05:39 (eighteen years ago)
Search: Lantana, Japanese Story (I think...I haven't seen either in years)
― Tape Store, Sunday, 12 August 2007 06:19 (eighteen years ago)
A TISM pisstake. They'd be so proud!
At least part of TISM is now a band called Root. True.
― SeekAltRoute, Sunday, 12 August 2007 09:47 (eighteen years ago)
There was meant to be an AC/DC movie coming out, tracing their early years - or so I heard almost two years ago. What happened to that?
― moley, Sunday, 12 August 2007 10:23 (eighteen years ago)
I think it did come out. It was certainly made at any rate. The only reason I think that is there was great excitement here in Perth, because they filmed some of it here. They put out a casting call for local bogans to be extras in the cemetery where Bonn Scott was buried.
― gem, Sunday, 12 August 2007 10:51 (eighteen years ago)
What was it called gem?
― moley, Sunday, 12 August 2007 11:02 (eighteen years ago)
'thunderstruck' rings a bell... could be wrong though
― gem, Sunday, 12 August 2007 11:04 (eighteen years ago)
Japanese Story was pretty lame.
― W4LTER, Sunday, 12 August 2007 11:55 (eighteen years ago)
"The Australian comedy THUNDERSTRUCK is a story of male bonding through rock 'n roll and a road trip across the Outback. Five buddies--Ronnie, Sonny, Sam, Ben, and Lloyd--all become friends because of their love of the hard rock band AC/DC. After a fun-filled night at one of the groups' concerts, the guys narrowly miss a fatal accident, and become convinced their devotion to the band saved them. Many years later, they've grown apart, but each one remembers the pledge made that night: to bury the first one of them to die by the grave of AC/DC frontman Bon Scott. When Ronnie is killed by a freak lightning bolt, the four remaining friends must reunite to take his ashes across Australia to Scott's gravesite, encountering a series of unusual characters along the way, and rediscovering the little things that had made them friends to begin with."
I did see half of this one, thinking it was the movie in question, but sadly it wan't. One of the worst movies I've ever seen - the acting was very NIDA. You can probably imagine the kind of thing it was.
― moley, Sunday, 12 August 2007 12:10 (eighteen years ago)
the acting was very NIDA
lawls
― W4LTER, Sunday, 12 August 2007 12:17 (eighteen years ago)
oh my. that sounds woeful.
― gem, Sunday, 12 August 2007 12:26 (eighteen years ago)
Kenny was merely average until that bloke from the movie appeared in every form of Australian media with a knowing wink. Then it turned fucking awful.
-- King Boy Pato, Wednesday, 8 August 2007 12:44 (5 days ago) Bookmark Link
I rented this on the weekend, and yeah, it's okay, not great. But I don't recall seeing him anywhere else, unlike Michael fucking 'Hot Property' Caton.
SEARCH SEARCH SEARCH: Holiday on the River Yarra. 1990, depressing as all fuck, a brilliant sixteen year old Claudia Karvan and an appearance by TISM.
― S-, Monday, 13 August 2007 02:31 (eighteen years ago)
Wasn't the Kenny guy on some advertisements? And on Spicks n' Fucking Specks?
― W4LTER, Monday, 13 August 2007 02:44 (eighteen years ago)
Farouk: He say plane fly overhead, drop value. In Beirut, plane fly over, drop bomb. I like these planes.
i could quote the castle all bloody day.
what's wrong with nida?
― CharlieNo4, Monday, 13 August 2007 11:15 (eighteen years ago)
A fucking lot.
I know, I was in a play and theatresports once. I know everything about acting that these grad HACKS don't!!
― King Boy Pato, Monday, 13 August 2007 12:07 (eighteen years ago)
Hasn't anyone mentioned Houseboat Horror yet? What's more spooky...Murder on Lake Terror or Brian Mannix??
― King Boy Pato, Monday, 13 August 2007 12:09 (eighteen years ago)
omg how did i forget puberty blues??? heroin ods in cronulla. gold.
― sunny successor, Monday, 13 August 2007 20:31 (eighteen years ago)
More heroin ODs in Cronulla, I say.
― King Boy Pato, Tuesday, 14 August 2007 09:09 (eighteen years ago)
Not in a hurry with the Shire being ice central.
― energy flash gordon, Tuesday, 14 August 2007 12:46 (eighteen years ago)
i watched 'Breaker' Morant (really that's how it's punctuated) for the first time in 35+ years last night. Really it's a handsome and well-made eentry in the railroaded-court martial genre, but distinguished plotwise by 1) these guys REALLY DID shoot the Boer prisoners and 2) Jack Thompson's big courtroom summation, which Bruce Beresford admits is just his views mouthed by the character, says civilians can't judge war crimes, essentially. Kind of ugly.
You can seewhy Edward W
― we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 8 March 2016 20:52 (ten years ago)
oodward and Bryan Brown got US careers out of it, tho.
― we can be heroes just for about 3.6 seconds (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 8 March 2016 20:53 (ten years ago)
wake in fright and snowtown are two of the most deeply terrifying films i've ever seen
― home organ, Tuesday, 8 March 2016 21:22 (ten years ago)
Ha, I was just coming here to express shock that there'd been no mention of Wake In Fright in this thread. Came out on Blu-Ray a couple of years ago, it's basically a cross between The Lost Weekend and Deliverance. Scary as hell but also kind of blackly hilarious.
― the top man in the language department (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 8 March 2016 21:25 (ten years ago)
Wasn't Bryan Brown's US career F/X: Murder By Illusion -> Cocktail -> that one where he spends two hours oiling and rubbing Mimi Rogers' norgs -> then back home to make the likes of Two Hands and Dirty Deeds and Old School forever?
― glandular lansbury (sic), Tuesday, 8 March 2016 23:38 (ten years ago)
Hardly a surprise that Wake In Fright didn't get mentioned during a decade when the only existing copy was a 16mm print that got max. one screening a year, illegally, in a pub in Sydney
Destroy: Mad Max 2
FP Michael B
― glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 00:12 (ten years ago)
XP He was Osiris in that Gods of Egypt thing this year!
― Now I Know How Joan of Arcadia Felt (C. Grisso/McCain), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 00:15 (ten years ago)
Never heard of it, but just looked it up and it was made in Australia by an Australian director with Australian tax credits
― glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 00:25 (ten years ago)
Wake In Fright is great, have gotten many of my merican friends into Australian movies through it (obv with warnings about extreme roo violence)
sidebar: Kinda happy that more people are talking about Ben Mendelsohn after Bloodline on Netflix. It's only taken FOREVER
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 00:33 (ten years ago)
Thanks to Love Seranade, every time we're watching Homeland and Miranda Otto comes on screen my bf pipes up "she could ease it for you maybe!".
― Interesting. No, wait, the other thing: tedious. (Trayce), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 01:51 (ten years ago)
lol
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 02:13 (ten years ago)
Here's a quick summary of why Wake In Fright had become little-known and almost disappeared completely: http://nfsa.gov.au/collection/film/wake-fright/recovery-and-restoration/
― glandular lansbury (sic), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 04:13 (ten years ago)
Ben Mendelsohn's had a pretty good profile since Animal Kingdom, no? Didn't think anyone actually watched Bloodline
― Number None, Wednesday, 9 March 2016 08:04 (ten years ago)
It got a lot of award recognition but I'm a lot of regular ppl didn't see it - lots of ppl I work with & just randomly talk to have seen Bloodline though, that seems to have made more of an impression
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 17:07 (ten years ago)
Animal Kingdom was so great tho, I still rep for it any chance I get
― Flamenco Drop (VegemiteGrrl), Wednesday, 9 March 2016 17:08 (ten years ago)
Has anyone watched Hounds of Love? A deeply unpleasant and tough watch. It's based on a true story about a Fred and Rosemary West style killers who abduct teenage girls in suburban Perth in the late 80s. While watching it, I thought to myself "why am I watching this?"
There's no Kate Bush in it either
― Well bissogled trotters (Michael B), Friday, 5 January 2018 08:53 (eight years ago)
I watched Ray Lawrence's "Bliss" (1985) last night. This is a film that Ive been meaning to see for years ever since I saw a very distinctive trailer for it back in the late 80s VHS days. Im sure it was some of the very arresting imagery and weird vibe of it that's stuck in my memory. The story of an advertising exec who has a near death experience and wakes up to find his life is a living hell. Itseems to be largely forgotten about these days. It caused mass walkouts when it was shown in Cannes (there's one particular scene where you'll know why). The film packs *a lot* into its 132 mins (I saw the Directors Cut). A bit of Gilliam-ish social realism and maybe a precursor to "How To Get Ahead in Advertising" but with a scabrous Aussie touch. Feels more 90s in tone than mid-80s too. The film takes so many abrupt plot turns and changes in mood and style that it can be a bit disorientating. Part fairy tale, part social realism. I loved it.It is quite messy but I was just amazed by its ambition, its pitch-black humour and it looks fantastic. The ending was quite moving too
― Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Thursday, 8 February 2024 14:01 (two years ago)